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Biology of Plants

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Do they all conduct photosynthesis? All photosynthetic organisms ... Hoodia. The Cladistic method. Cladistic or phylogenteic analysis- most widely used method ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biology of Plants


1
Biology of Plants

What is botany? Botany The study of plants
and plant-like organisms. Botany without
Borders Link 10 min video
2
Botanical organisms what dothey have in
common?
  • Do they all conduct photosynthesis?
  • All photosynthetic organisms are considered
  • botanical organisms
  • but,
  • not all botanical organisms are photosynthetic.

3
Botanical organismsDo they all have cell walls?
  • All cell-walled eukaryotes are botanical
  • organisms
  • but,
  • some botanical organisms lack cell walls.

4
Botanical organisms
  • Do they lack motility?
  • Plants and fungi are non-motile
  • but,
  • slime molds are motile as are some algae and
  • cyanobacteria.

5
Botanical organisms
  • What are not botanical organisms?
  • animals heterotrophic protists

6
Systematics
  • Organisms are grouped into broader taxonomic
    categories arranged in Hiearchy Kingdom was the
    most inclusive unit Now we also have Domains
  • Current Hierarchal order of Organisms
  • D K P C O F G S

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Forms of blue-green algae
  • extant species occur as single cells
  • (unicellular) and colonial forms

9
Colonial formsof blue green algae
  • each cell is independent
  • specialization largely restricted to two
  • cell types heterocysts and akinetes
  • no true multicellular forms

akinetes
heterocysts
10
Chapter 12
  • Systematics The Science of Biological Diversity

11
Evolution
  • Charles Darwin
  • Over 30 million different kinds of species

From simple organisms to more complex
12
Nomenclature
  • Common names
  • Scientific barrier
  • Scientific name- a two word latin name that
    identifies it precisely (identity card)
  • Today rules and rationale
  • Characteristics used for classifying
  • Overview of major groups
  • Hypothetical mechanism of eukaryotic evolution

13
  • What is the binomial system of nomenclature?

Prunus persica
14
Systematics
  • The scientific study of biological diversity
  • its evolutionary History
  • Goal-

15
  • Genera grouped into Families (- aceae)
  • Families into Orders (-ales)
  • Orders into Classes
  • Classes into Phylum
  • (Plants) groups of classes into Divisions now
    known as Phylum
  • Phylum into Kingdoms

16
  • The higher the category, the more inclusive it is
  • Members of a kingdom share general characters
    members of a species share quite specific
    characters

17
  • Category- the level at which it is ranked
  • i.e. genus and species are categories
  • Taxon- taxonomic group at any level
  • i.e. Prunus and Prunus persica are taxa within
    those categories

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Taxonomy
  • The identifying, naming and classifying of
    species
  • 18th century Swedish Naturalist Carl Linnaeus
  • Polynomial- descriptive phrases
  • Nepeta floribus interrupte spicatus pedunculatis
  • Binomial- two term system a single word combined
    with the genus
  • Nepeta cataria ( cat associated)
  • International code of Botanical Nomenclature

21
Carl Linnaeus 18th Century Naturalist
22
The Species Name consist of the Genus name plus
the specific Epithet
  • Species name- two parts
  • First part- genus (generic name)
  • Second part- specific epithet
  • Catnip- Nepeta and cataria
  • Generic name is used to refer to entire group of
    species

23
Species 1 Of violet genus Viola papilionaceae
24
Viola tricolor
25
Viola hortensis over 500 species of violas
26
Specific epithet
  • Artemisia biennis- a kind of wormwood tarragon,
    sage brush

27
  • Lactuca biennis- a species of wild lettuce

28
  • Oenothera biennis-
  • O. biennis
  • O. biennis

29
Type specimen- each species Housed in a
herbarium Podandrogyne formosa
30
Subspecies names may consist three parts
  • Prunus persica var. persica Peach
  • Prunus persica var. nectarina Nectarine

31
Organisms are grouped into broader Taxonomic
Categories
  • Five Kingdoms
  • Monera- bacteria (prokaryotes)
  • The other four are Eukaryotes
  • Protista
  • Animal
  • Fungi
  • Plant

32
Phylogenetic trees The History of
Creation German Naturalist Ernst Haeckel 1866
33
Artificial Taxa
  • Relationhips are unknown or uncertain
  • Widely accepted taxa containing members descended
    from more than one ancestral line- Polyphyletic

34
Phylogenetic trees
  • Depict the genealogical relationship b/w taxa
  • Tested with fossil records and structural and
    molecular studies
  • Ideally every taxa is monophyletic- the members
    of the taxon at whatever category should all be
    descendents of a single common ancestral species
  • Natural Taxa

35
Traditional Method Based on outward similarities
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  • Does the similarity of a particular feature
    reflect inheritance from a common ancestor or
    does it reflect adaptation to similar
    environments?

39
Homologous features
  • Have a common origin
  • But not necessarily a common function
  • Foilage leaves, bud scales floral parts
    modification of the leaf

40
Analagous feature
  • Have a common function but different evolutionary
    origin
  • Structures area said to be analagous and are the
    result of convergent evolution- selective forces
    result in similar structures

41
Spurge Family Euphorbiaceae
Fleshy, columnar stems, protective spines,
reduced leaves
42
Catus family Cactaceae
43
Milweed family Asclepiadaceae Hoodia
44
The Cladistic method
  • Cladistic or phylogenteic analysis- most widely
    used method
  • Approach focuses on branching of one lineage to
    another in the course of evolution
  • Attempts to identify monophyletic groups or
    clades- defined by a possession of unique feature
  • Widespread feature- preexisting or ancestral

45
  • Outgroup- closely related taxa outside the one
    being analyzed.
  • Cladogram- provides a graphical representation of
    a working model of branching sequences.

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